I suppose you could say it does

although we'll never know how far back, since my dad was adopted. His adopted father played quite a bit though, recreationally....
however, unlike most father-and-sons, we can't just go kick back, play, and have fun - usually just ends up with him playing and me racking
I didn't know your dad was adopted. So am I. However, I have met some of birth family and am close with one blood brother, though we didn't get to know each other until we were in our thirties.
My adopted parents were 52 and 54 when I was adopted, right from the hospital. When I entered adolesence, it was during the Woodstock era. By this time, my parents were well into their sixties.
For a long time, my mom would never go out in public with me if I was wearing jeans. She thought it was disgraceful for a woman to wear pants. Actually, when I was in school, all girls had to wear dresses with hems that came to the middle of the knee.
I got bit by the pool bug and landed me a job in a local pool room as a young adult. My mom did not like this one bit, stating, "My daughter working in billiard parlor." Of course, she was born in 1902, and my dad was born in 1898. Talk about a generation gap :grin-square:
We got a cute kitten, and I named her "8-ball." My mom did not like any name associated with "billiards" and would only refer to her as "April."
Pool was in my blood for years, but I ended up having to devote my time 24/7 to my career. I left pool, but it never left my heart. Even when I was working in-house on Capitol Hill, I had a poster by my desk from the 1986 movie, "The Color of Money." Believe it or not, I had never heard of a player by the name of Keith McCready at that time. The only players I knew were locals, Geese, Cigar Tom, Tom-Tom, Strawberry, Quick Vick and Bobby Hawk, Fat Mike, Korean Lee, Drug Fair, Lawyer Robbie, Cab Driver Pete, all local action men.
Pool used to be a big part of my life, and then I let go of it, but somewhere about 10 years ago, I got bit by the love bug and was sucked back into it. Again, pool became a big part of my life for about 6 or 7 years, until I realized pool was steamrolling right over me. Pool is so different today than it was when I was in my twenties, young and dumb with no responsibilities. If anybody had ever told me I'd be back into this pool racket 10 years ago, I'd have told them they were nuts.
I totally empathize with Al Pacino's infamous quote.
Just when I thought I was out, they pull me back in. -- Michael Corleone in The Godfather
That's my story, and I'm sticking with it! :thumbup: